Not content to kick off with arguably the most threadbare opening line in popular music history (“I woke up in the morning...”), this production also distinguishes itself as one of the clunkiest marriages between lyric and melody that I’ve encountered for months. The chief crime here is the way the robotic melody clumsily over-emphasises certain syllables by virtue of putting them on strong beats: for example, the third syllable of “felt so far away” at 0:17 and the first syllable of “subtract the distance” at 0:30, amongst others that even Abba would probably have baulked at.

Perhaps the song might have weathered a few moments of awkward phrasing, given enough panache in the vocal delivery but, unfortunately, any expression that might initially have been in the performances has been well and truly mashed out of them by a ham-fisted comping and pitch/time-mangling job. Before you write me off as overly harsh on this point, check out “I wish I could speed up time / To that moment you are mine” at 0:22 — it’s like the audio equivalent of one of those ransom notes pasted together from snippets of a newspaper, sounding almost as if it’s composed of single notes from different singers spliced together. The upshot is that I find it impossible to care about anything they’re singing about at all, whatever earnest faces they may pull on video. Surely even a plastic girl group deserves better than this? On second thoughts, don’t answer that...

I reviewed this track off the Now 82 compilation, so here are some credits from Wikipedia and Discogs:

Writers: Steve Mac, Autumn RoweProduction: Steve Mac

Wikipedia also flagged up this little review as well, which includes "The vocals [have] been edited a bit too much and some emotion and personality has gone." Glad to know I'm not the only one hearing this.